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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Michael Horowitz wrote:
> Frogleg > wrote: > >> On Sat, 07 Feb 2004 07:44:51 -0500, Michael Horowitz >> > wrote: >> >> >> >> Well, I'm not a haute cuisine master, nor do I play one on TV, but a >> combo of washed out chicken, pork fat, and beef broth sounds...a >> little odd. >> >>> I'm trying to transition from a white-knuckled dependence >>> on recipies to a more logical approach to cooking. >> >> If recipes are still white-knuckle, keep practicing with them until >> you're comfortable. Gifted and experienced cooks can make wonderful >> food 'off the cuff'. (snip) >> Your bland chicken? Over rice? There are a million recipes(!) that >> begin with X cups of diced, cooked chicken. Diced, sauted veg usually >> come into the equation somewhere. The remedy isn't to add more pepper >> to a sauce, but to have some idea of what you have in mind. > > Hello FL - I have several sauces folks have previously suggested; I > was trying to mix the theory I knew (deglaze/roux to thicken/add > stock) with what I thought (get a stronger taste using bacon grease (snip) Absolutely nothing wrong with a modified bechamel sauce, either, Mike. My grandmother, my mother and I all have made variations of what you describe. We save the bacon grease for biscuits to serve it over, rather than rice, but rice works and even noodles ![]() After you've made a light roux with butter, S&P and flour and milk and cooked the sauce to medium thickness, add about 1-1/2 c. of broth or stock. And a splash of dry white wine. IMHO, herbs are essential, even if it's nothing more than some good fresh chopped parsley. Fresh marjoram is excellent with this; rosemary is also good but is a bit strong in flavour and must be used (IMO) judiciously. I always add a bit of cayenne pepper to this mix. Add back the cooked chicken and cook the mixture down a bit. Serve over crumbled biscuits, rice or noodles. Jill |
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